Search This Blog

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Murder on Sister's Row by Victoria Thompson

Murder on Sister's Row is a Gaslight Mystery with 13 titles and featuring Sarah Brandt, a midwife, and Sgt. Frank Malloy.  The setting is 19th c. New York.  This is the first one I've read: I pulled it from the new book shelf at the library.

Sarah Brandt has been summoned to deliver a baby at what she first assumes to be a private home, then believes to be a rooming house for young ladies, and finally realizes is an upscale brothel.  The mother manages to confide in Sarah that she wants to leave, but that leaving is dangerous, so she prevails on Sarah to take a message to a wealthy society woman who helps women escape from prostitution.

Sarah does deliver the message and ends up becoming slightly involved with the attempt to rescue the young woman and her baby.  The "slightly" comes back to bite her, and just as the house was not what it originally seemed, many of the characters, including the young mother are not what they seem.

The writing and dialogue at the beginning was simplistic, but did improve.   The characters are a little thin--especially Sgt. Malloy whose role is definitely limited.

About a C in a grading scale.  I didn't  mind reading it, but it wasn't terribly involving.

Fiction.  Historical Mystery.  2011.  289 pages.

www:wonder by Robert J. Sawyer

www: wonder is the final installation in this trilogy about Caitlin Decter, Webmind, and the spontaneous emergence of a consciousness or artificial intelligence.

The U.S. government continues to seek a way to shut down Webmind, but Webmind has his own friends and allies who do their best to prevent this from happening.  

Although I enjoyed this installment, I wasn't as pleased as I was with the first two in the series, www:wake and www:watch.  Some of Caitlin's  choices seem out of character (as presented in the first two volumes) and more for the purpose of getting across some of Sawyer'spersonal opinions.  The usually logical and immensely intelligent Caitlin becomes more of a dodgy teenager more suitable for an entirely different kind of novel.  Sawyer has some issues he wants to discuss, and Caitlin becomes more a tool for bringing those issues to the forefront and less an genuinely evolving, maturing adolescent.

Another part that bothered me was the "Other."  There are some serious and frightening implications here that seem to be brought up and dismissed without consequence.

Nevertheless, although it is difficult to discuss this novel without spoilers, the third and final volume wraps up series pretty effectively.  The trilogy contains a mixture of genuine science and speculative science, real people and fictional characters, and presents quite a few ethical and philosophical dilemmas.  It is at times thought-provoking and at times didactic.

Good science fiction takes scientific advances and imagines what might be a next step and/ or how the advances will affect both individuals and society.  The www series certainly does this.

I do recommend the trilogy in its entirety, despite having a favorite volume.  Aside from the story line, the history of the web and its creators and the sidelines on autism and on primate intelligence and communication are fascinating.

Fiction.    Futuristic/ Science Fiction/ Ya.  2011.  352 pages.

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

The Mysterious Benedict Society by Trenton Lee Stewart

The Mysterious Benedict Society is a book for young readers at the upper elementary to middle school levels.  It offers some unusual and endearing characters, suspense, and a criminal mastermind.


Reynie Muldoon lives in an orphanage  when he sees an add in the paper reading, "Are you a gifted child looking for Special Opportunities?"  Reynie has never really fit in at the orphanage and decides to show up for the exams.  The exams are certainly unusual, but finally Reynie and three other children are the only ones who have made it through all of the exams.


Reynie, Kate Weatherhill, Sticky Washington, and Constance Contraire are introduced to the unusual Mr. Benedict who informs them that, if they choose, they may take part in an important and dangerous mission to save the world.  The four all agree to the challenge, form The Mysterious Benedict Society, and prepare to infiltrate The Learning Institute for the Very Enlightened.


Our heroes must employ the unique skills they possess and must work together to defeat the insidious Mr. Curtain who plans to take over the world.


An excellent book for the target age group, The Mysterious Benedict Society would be a great read aloud book for both parents and children.  It provides good fun and adventure, and there are more:  The Mysterious Benedict Society and the Perilous Journey and The Mysterious Benedict Society and the Prisoner's Dilemma.


Other Reviews:  Framed and Booked, Remarkable Reads, Madigan Reads


Fiction.  Adventure.  2007.  486 pages.

Murder at Beechlands by Maureen Sarsfield

Murder at Beechlands didn't do too much for me--even though I love the cover.  It took me forever to read it, and I must have read 3 or 4 books in between beginning and finishing this one.

I left it at the table outside where I often sit and read, but it dragged.  And dragged. Still, I wanted to know who did it, so I read other books, but kept going back and spending a little time with this one.


Here is the synopsis form Powell's Books:

Inspector Lane Parry of Scotland Yard finds himself on a busman's holiday when he forced to take refuge from a heavy snowstorm in a country hotel while traveling in Sussex in January 1948. At first, he mistakes the guests for inmates in a lunatic asylum until the body of Wing Commander Lawton (Lawty) Lawrence is found in the snow. First pubished in 1948 in the U.K. as A Party for None and in the U.S. as A Party for Lawty. It is the second book of the Parry duet. The first, Murder at Shots Hall, is also available from TheRue Morgue Press.


Fiction.  Country House Mystery.  Original publ. date, 1948.  187 pages.

Saturday, October 15, 2011

Previous R.I.P. Reads

I've tried to corral some of my previous R.I.P. Challenge books.  They are in no particular order.

Lolly Willowes by Sylvia Townsend Warner
The House on the Borderland by William Hope Hodgson
The Haunted Hotel by Wilkie Collins
The Wyvern Mystery by J. Sheridan Le Fanu
Death in the Garden by Elizabeth Ironsides
The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins (a reread, and just as good as the first time)
The Thirteenth Tale by Diane Setterfield
The Woman in Black by Susan Hill
The Keep by Jennifer Egan
A Coldness in the Blood by Fred Saberhagen

Grave Sight by Charlaine Harris
The Loving Huntsmen by Sylvia Townsend Warner
Season of the Witch by Natasha Mostert
The last Apprentice by Joseph Delaney
The Moonstone by Wilkie Collins (another reread)
New Moon by Stephanie Meyer
A Great and Terrible Beauty by Libba Bray
Ghostwalk by Rebecca Stott
Dissolution by C.J. Sansom
The Sisters Grimm Book One by Michael Buckley

Renfield: Slave of Dracula by Barbara Hambly
Homebody by Orson Scott Card
Rebel Angels by Libba Bray
Bat Wings by Sax Rohmer
Souless by Gail Carriger
The Return of Dr. Fu-Manchu by Sax Rohmer
The Society of S by Susan Hubbard
The Blackstone Key by Rose Melikan
The Little Stranger by Sarah Waters
I Am Legend by Richard Matheson

Dark Celebration by Christine Feehan
Four and Twenty Blackbirds by Cherie Priest
Shakespeare Undead by Lori Handeland
The Haunted Abbot by Peter Tremayne
The Insidious Dr. Fu-Manchu by Sax Rohmer

I had to really hunt for these because I didn't label all of them as R.I.P. books. Some were excellent, some were not.  This year I'd already read a lot of Gothic or Supernatural books that I should have saved for the challenge. I'll add this years books to the list when the challenge is over.

Thursday, October 13, 2011

Secret of the White Rose by Stefanie Pinthoff

The Secret of the White Rose is the third in Pinthoff's series about Simon Ziele.  Somehow, I missed the second in this series and will have to go back and pick it up.

Set in the early 1900's, the novel mixes detective work and psychology.  Simon Ziele, a police detective, became involved with Alistair Sinclair, a law professor and criminologist, in the first book in the series In the Shadow of Gotham.

In The Secret of the White Rose,  a judge in a high profile trial is found with his throat slashed, and the widow calls in his old friend Alistair Sinclair, who makes sure that Detective Simon Ziele is involved in the case.  Another lawyer and old friend is murdered, and suddenly Sinclair begins withdrawing from Ziele and his own daughter-in-law, Isabella.  Sinclair obviously recognizes some of the symbols left by the murderer, but eventually refuses to engage further with Simon Ziele in the investigation.

As in the first book, real historical characters and events are mentioned and give the novel a kind of verisimilitude.

Pinthoff has been compared to Caleb Carr (The Alienist), but she isn't as dark as Carr even though both use the study of the criminal mind in their plots.  Jeb Rubenfield also uses the same device and historical setting.

Although, I didn't enjoy this one as much as In the Shadow of Gotham, it was still a good read.

other reviews:  walk with a book, Stewartry,

Fiction.  Mystery/ Historical Fiction.  2011. 384 pages.

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

The Devil's Puzzle by Clare O'Donohue (R.I.P.)

The Devil's Puzzle is a Someday Quilts Mystery and an ARC from Penguin's Plume Division.

The small town of Archer's Rest is preparing to commemorate the 350th anniversary of the town's founding.  Named for the grave of John Archer, a man who may have established the town because he was seeking a quiet place to practice witchcraft, Archer's Rest is full of legends that are a result of many embellished retellings.

Nell and Oliver are planning to surprise Nell's grandmother by replanting a rose garden in Eleanor's neglected garden, but the discovery of a skeleton derails the surprise.  The skeleton threatens the security of someone in the small town, and even Eleanor is a suspect.  As the investigation proceeds, curious acts of vandalism and threats against prominent citizens threaten the big anniversary celebration.

This is a cozy mystery, but one with a little more complexity and more defined characters.  I really enjoyed the  mystery and the interesting characters in this novel.

other reviews:  dru's book musings,

I'm using this for Carl's R.I.P. challenge because of the witchcraft connection; even though it is a light read and not really scary, it is an entertaining novel.



Fiction.  Mystery.  20ll.  276 pages.

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Old Magic by Marianne Curley (R.I.P.)

Old Magic is a YA novel about Kate, who is training to be a witch, and Jarrod, who has no idea about the powers he possesses.  Jarrod's powers can be dangerous, especially since he doesn't believe in them, and therefore, has no control over them.

Kate is something of a social outcast, and Jarrod wants desperately to fit in with the high school clique--or just about anywhere, for that matter, as his family has been on the move most of his life.  The two are thrown together because Kate recognizes Jarrod's powers and wants him to realize the importance of acknowledging and controlling them.

There is a family curse, some time travel, a wicked illegitimate sorcerer.

other reviews:  Fyrefly Books, Mind Reading?, Witchy Books,

R.I.P. Challenge.




Fiction.  YA/ Paranormal/Time Travel.  2009.  400 pages.

Monday, October 10, 2011

Murkmere by Patricia Eliot

Murkmere was a fun read--a little magic, a little Gothic, a little mystery, a little take-off on the Selkie myth.

Aggie is a village girl who takes a job as companion to the rich ward of the local Master and must go to Murkmere to live.  She is so impressed by the grand old mansion, that she doesn't initially notice its state of disrepair.  The Master is kind, but crippled, and heavily influenced by his steward.  He also carries a deep grief over the loss of his young wife, from which he has never recovered.

Leah, the petulant ward, doesn't want Aggie there and escapes from her presence when she can.  When she must endure Aggie, her tongue is sharp and sarcastic.  It is particularly hurtful when Leah makes fun of Aggie's religious beliefs, calling them superstitious.

Eventually, the two girls manage a better relationship, and Aggie comes to believe that her "religion" is not only superstition, but a superstition imposed by the government to keep the populace under control.  Aggie has access to books that the Protectorate had forbidden through Leah, and the girls' friendship advances until....

The novel is a kind of dystopian novel, in that some great change has resulted in a devolution of science and industrial advancement, but set in a quasi-Victorian setting.  I really liked the change-up of the Selkie myth and look forward to the next novel in the series, Ambergate.

This one is for Carl's R.I.P Challenge.

other reviews:  The Geranium Cat , Bookgeek Reviews,

Fiction.  YA/Gothic/Fantasy.  2007.  352 pages.

Friday, October 07, 2011

Among Others by Jo Walton

  Among Others is a YA novel.  It is an interesting read and will be especially appealing to those who love science fiction because Morwenna is a prolific reader and her favorite genres are SF and Fantasy.


In many ways, the novel is a reading list of SF and Fantasy titles from the 1970's and earlier.  Mor's discovery of a  reading group becomes a sort of lifeline for this teen who must endure life in an unpleasant boarding school after losing her twin sister.


Not limited to a fondness for SF and Fantasy, Mor also loves T.S. Eliot's Four Quartets and is thrilled when she is able to buy her own copy which she reads on the train as she returns from Cardiff..  She says that she "got drunk on the words."  (Eliot can do that--make you drunk on words.)  She goes on to say:
"I'm so glad I have my own copy.  I can read them again and again.  I can read them again and  again on trains, all my life, and every time I do I'll remember today and it will connect up.  (Is that magic?  Yes, it is a sort of magic, but it is more just reading my book.)"

Damn, I love that quote!  And I love T.S. Eliot!

The novel contains magic, but a strange kind of magic that Mor explains as being very different from that in her favorite books.  More primitive, more elemental; less understandable.  And is the magic that of fairies or witches, or is the magic in this novel more symbolic of growing independence?


The book is a bit slow and digressive.  It is a coming of age story with an emphasis on the importance of books (and of  sharing beloved books with other sympathetic readers).  The novel can't be taken literally, and yet, many of us will recognize the truth it contains with a powerful resonance.


I don't think I liked it as much as some have; at least, not in relation to the plot.  What I did love was the recognition of loving the same books and acknowledging the crucial role these books have played in enduring and rising above the difficulties in life.  Books are a haven for many of us just as they are for Morwenna.


-------------
  There are perhaps no days of our childhood we lived so fully as those we spent with a favorite book.
           --Marcel Proust
---------------------
Other reviews/ opinions:  Of Books and Bicycles., The Written World, Beauty Is a Sleeping Cat, Things Mean a Lot, The SF Site Featured Review,

Fiction.  Coming of Age/SF/Fantasy/YA.  20ll.  304 pages.

Thursday, October 06, 2011

www.watch by Robert J. Sawyer

www:watch follows www:wake, which I recently reviewed.


Tiny review of Wake:  Caitlin Decter, a sixteen-year-old blind girl, receives an implant that gives her sight in one eye, and also, inexplicably, enables her to see the world wide web.  She senses something else in the web, a consciousness; at the same time, this emerging consciousness finds a connection with Caitlin.  Caitlin, learning to accommodate herself to a sighted world (for example, she must learn the alphabet and to read visually, rather than using Braille), begins first inadvertently, and then deliberately, nurturing the consciousness that she calls Webmind.


The emerging consciousness of Webmind comes to the attention of the U.S. government, and understandably, the powers that be are concerned about a consciousness that can handle the information that Webmind can--for many reasons.


In a technological world, Webmind can access just about anything.  His opponents feel that if a consciousness that expands exponentially is allowed to continue, it will become smarter than any human.  The President and his security advisers realize the potential for terrorism and corruption and fear the possibility that Webmind could enslave mankind.


The decision is made to shut Webmind down before this possibility can occur.  However, terminating Webmind proves difficult, and the first attempt fails.  Webmind and Caitlin (and his other friends) must come up with a defense before the next attempt manages to succeed.


Although this trilogy is for a YA audience, the study of human nature, the information about mathematics, physics, language, and cyber technology is abundant and engrossing.


This is not a trilogy than should be read out of order.  The emergence of Webmind in www.wake, the characters, and initial plot lines are necessary for www:watch to be appropriately enjoyed.



I'm definitely a fan of this series.


---sidenote---
In Sawyer's 1999 novel Flash Forward, he predicted the naming of this year's Nobel Laureate.  Not terribly surprising, I guess, since he is so knowledgeable about  the world of physics, but interesting.  Here is a link to his recent blog post.


Other reviews:  Bookish, The Guilded Earlobe, Rhapsody in Books,


Fiction.  Science Fiction/Futuristic/YA.  2010.  368 pages.

Wednesday, October 05, 2011

The Sandalwood Tree by Elle Newmark

The Sandalwood Tree is the story of Martin and Evie Mitchell.  Martin, a veteran of WWII, returns home emotionally damaged, and Evie has difficulty relating to the man her young husband has become.  When Martin wins a Fulbright Scholarship, Evie and their young son accompany him to India.

Evie is hoping that their time in India will rekindle their relationship, but instead, finds herself again shut out.  Fascinated by a packet of letters Evie discovers hidden in their little bungalow, she finds herself keeping the letters secret.

 Frustrated with her inability to understand Martin or to re-establish their connection, Evie becomes obsessed with researching the two young women whose letters from the 1850's intrigue her.

In 1947, India is at the cusp of partition.  Nearly 100 years earlier, India was on the verge of the Sepoy Rebellion.  In some ways, nothing has changed, both are dangerous and historic periods where cultures clash. Ellemark does an excellent job of setting the scene, engaging the reader in the sights and smells of India, its history and culture-- to reinforce certain similarities of these epic periods.

 Martin and Evie must each learn something about themselves, about each other, and about the times they live in.  Will their marriage survive what they discover?

Other reviews/ opinions:  Reading Fueled by Tea, Daisy's Book Journal,

Fiction.  Historical Fiction.  2011.  368 pages.

The Borrower by Rebecca Makkai

At first, I thought I was going to love The Borrower, but in the end, I didn't.


The beginning was interesting and quirky, but the story and some of the characters were ultimately...just disagreeable.


Here's a bit from Kirkus Review:


A children’s librarian in Hannibal, Mo., finds herself on a long, strange trip in Makkai’s ruminative first novel.
Lucy Hull feels sorry for Ian Drake, the most devoted attendee of her read-aloud on Friday afternoons. Ian’s reading is severely circumscribed by his mother’s fundamentalist strictures, which rule out everything from Roald Dahl to Harry Potter. Lucy is further appalled when she learns that Ian—whom everyone assumes is gay, though he’s only 10—is forced to attend weekly classes with Pastor Bob, who specializes in rehabilitating “sexually confused brothers and sisters in Christ.” So when Lucy finds Ian hiding in the library one morning with a knapsack, she decides to help him run away. 
I found the book irritating and heavy-handed.  I only finished because at the time, I'd run out of library books and didn't have anything really calling to me.
Fiction.  2011.  336 pages.

Tuesday, October 04, 2011

Just for Fun Bookish Links

Now this is a costume  I like!  The Book Fairy from Lilliedale:



Word Up, Nerd Up is at it again with a Banned Books Banner!  And a tutorial  :)

What kinds of bookish craftiness or decorating have you seen lately?

Monday, October 03, 2011

Ashes of the Earth by Eliot Pattison

Ashes of the Earth is a dystopian novel.  I'm going to make this a short review for two reasons:  I read it over a month ago, and I was disappointed in it.

I've read three of  Pattison's political thrillers about Tibet.  I loved each one.  They were complex and educational and exciting and full of adventure in the Tibetan mountains.  The novels are about a former Chinese investigator who looked too closely at situations he should have overlooked and ends up exiled to a "gulag" in Tibet.  As a prisoner, he becomes influenced by the Buddhists Monks who are his fellow prisoners and also condemned to forced labor.  The Skull Mantra begins the series, and I loved each of the three books in this series that I have read.


For this novel, however, I'm going to resort to a canned review from Publisher's Weekly:


Having successfully portrayed both modern-day Tibet and Colonial America in two series, Edgar-winner Pattison (Eye of the Raven) launches a third with this brilliant if grim mystery set in the 21st century 25 years after global mega-acts of terror have destroyed all U.S. government entities and almost all infrastructure. Hadrian Boone, one of the cofounders of the struggling colony of Carthage, located near the Great Lakes, is one of those who remembers the former world, as the time before the apocalypse is referred to, but he's on the outs with the community's leaders and on the verge of being exiled. The chance discovery of a body triggers a series of events that reintroduces murder and other crimes to a community reliant on 19th-century technology. Boone's efforts to find the truth and what it implies for Carthage's future put him in harm's way time after time. Pattison blends the bleakness of The Road with a well-crafted whodunit plot for another winner.


I didn't really like the feel of the novel and found the protagonist Hadrian Boone too difficult to believe in.  


On the other hand, I'm reminded of how much I admired the Tibetan series.  These novels are long and involved, complex, frightening, thrilling...and show the horrors inflicted on Tibet as the Chinese try to eradicate the Tibetan culture.


Other opinions:  King of the Nerds, Mystery Maven Blog, --these and other reviews I found are all positive.  I'm odd-man-out.


Fiction.  Post-apocalyptic, Dystopian.  2011.  400 pages.

Saturday, October 01, 2011

100 Best Nonfiction Books

Another great list--100 Best Nonfiction Books  -- over at The Unruly Reader.  As soon as I work myself out from under all of the reviews and TBR stacks I need to catch up on, I'm going to begin working on this list!

I know I've written about Studs Terkel's book Working before and about the wonderful songs in the musical version, but here are some versions of the songs:

This version has Rita Moreno serving Studs Terkel in the Waitress song.

Thursday, September 29, 2011

When She Woke by Hillary Jordan

When She Woke was an ARC from Algonquin Books.

Hannah Payne is a chrome; chroming is the punishment for all sorts of crimes in Hannah's world.  A method has been devised to color the skin of those who have been found guilty of crimes ranging from theft to murder, with different colors assigned to each transgression

Hannah's crime is abortion,  considered murder in this dystopian world, and to make matters worse, Hannah will reveal neither the father of the child nor the doctor who performed the abortion.  Hannah is chromed red and, because of her refusal to reveal the father and the doctor, given a longer sentence. When released back into the world, Hannah (as are all other chromes) is a pariah, easily recognized and vulnerable.

Connections to the Scarlet Letter?  Definitely, down to the initials of the protagonist and of the fundamentalist minister who fathered child.

The premise is fascinating, and the novel has its high points.  Ultimately, however, the novel does not live up to its promise, and the conclusion feels unnatural and incomplete.

I would still recommend the novel because it offers some interesting concepts and raises some questions.  It isn't as if I didn't enjoy it, because I did, but I  feel as if the most interesting portions didn't receive enough time and attention.

I have to agree with Kailana, there are some things that didn't work for me, but still...a worthwhile read.

Other Reviews/ opinions:  Bookfoolery and Babble, Kailana

Fiction.  Dystopian/Speculative Fiction.  2011.  352 pages.

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

In the Mail


Steplings - an ARC by C.W. Smith
Plaster Studio:  Mixed Media Techniques by Stephanie Lee &amp Judy Wise (I'm loving this one)
Stitch Alchemy by Kelli Perkins



Happy Returns by Angela Thirkell - ARC from  Beaufort Books (I remember seeing positive reviews of Thirkell,so when offered copies, I gladly accepted!)
Enter Sir Robert by Angela Thirkell -   Also from Beaufort Books
I'm Dancing as Fast as I Can by Barbara Gordon -   Another one from the nice people at Beaufort Books


Murder at Beechlands by Maureen Sarsfield - I ordered this after seeing the review at In So Many Words



I'm going to have to forego the library for a while....because there are more ARCs and Amazon orders on the way.

Monday, September 26, 2011

Fall Crafting

I love these tea towels from Word Up, Nerd Up!
Aren't they great?

I'm thinkin' bookish quotes on pillows would be great, too!

Not reading as much lately because I've been busy crafting.  Since I'm so behind on book reviews, not reading as much helps me trim down the back list of reviews.

Here's what I've been up to:


Some old-fashioned Izannah Walker inspired dolls.




 A cage doll.  I made a Santos style cage for her and have just finished her.

Some new Halloween fabrics, a paper mache skull, a circle cut from burlap with a gathered strip of Halloween fabric.

Just finished a scrap and skeleton garland for the fireplace and am working on two Halloween dolls.  I've half a dozen more projects in mind, but don't know if I'll get to them all.

More craftiness at Bayou Quilts.

Time to get out all the previous Halloween's crafts and begin decorating.  I love this time of year, don't you?  Cooler weather, fall color, Halloween.


Although I made the bobble head and the witch on the log, I've had the "Nalloween" sign for
 several years.   I didn't notice when I bought it that there was a slight problem with the letters!
















I've ordered a few books that I can use for the R.I.P. Challenge,
some on fabric art, and some mixed media books.
Looking forward to quite a few welcome deliveries.


Saturday, September 24, 2011

The Woodcutter by Reginald Hill

I love Reginald Hill.  I love Dalziel and Pascoe.  The Woodcutter, however, is a stand-alone novel and not part of the Dalziel and Pascoe series.

Wolf Hadda comes from a pretty common background, then there are several missing years.  When he returns, he gets the girl he wants, a Knighthood, and becomes very, very rich.

His perfect world comes apart one morning when the police storm his house and accuse him of having child pornography on his computer.  Absolutely certain that he doesn't, he gives them permission to comb through his computer, where...of course, they find pornography.

An unbelieving Wolf (a man with a short temper at the best of times) lashes out at the policeman in charge.  Things go from bad to worse when his attorney (and supposed friend) proves to be more hindrance than help.
His life continues to deteriorate, partly from his own actions, and Wolf ends up badly disfigured and crippled from an accident, and eventually convicted crimes he didn't commit.

A reviled man, he spends seven years in prison.  When a new psychiatrist arrives at the prison, she eventually manages a break-through in Wolf's claims of innocence and gets Wolf released on a  British version of parole.  Wolf Hadda (who had done some reading about denial and about the psychiatrist) is determined to discover who was involved in setting him up and why.  Pay back, is in order.

I was glued to the pages.  So different from the Dalziel and Pascoe novels (which I adore), The Woodcutter is an excellent novel!

Other reviews/opinions:  Auntie Em,   Kittling: Books,  My Shelf Confessions,

Fiction.  Drama/Mystery/Thriller.  2011.  528 pages.